City living costs continue to rise

City living costs continue to rise

New figures have shown that urban house prices continue to outpace earnings growth to make Oxford the UK’s least affordable city to live in, reports the Independent.

If the hustle and bustle of the UK’s diverse and lively cities are your idea of property heaven, the chances of getting on the housing ladder just got even further away, new data has revealed, with the average city house price now coming in at around £225,000.

How bad Manchester’s housing crisis really is

That’s a rise of almost a third from £170,000 in 2012, despite average city annual earnings over the same period coming in at only 7 per cent higher – around £32,800, according to Lloyds Bank’s Affordable Cities Review.

It means home affordability across UK cities is now at its worst level since the financial crisis of 2008. In fact, prices in Greater London are up by 57 per cent in the last five years alone, but it’s among the spires of Oxford where your money stretches the least.

The average house price in the famous university hub is now more than £385,000 – nearly 11 times the £36,000 annual gross average earnings in the city. It’s a similar story in Greater London, Winchester, Cambridge and Chichester, where property will typically set you back more than 10 times the average salary for those areas.

But it’s St Albans that has recorded the highest price rise of any UK city over the last decade, recording an average increase of 65 per cent.

At the other end of the scale, it’s no great surprise that the 20 most affordable cities are all outside southern England with Stirling, the former Scottish capital, offering buyers homes at an average of £174,000 – less than four times average gross earnings for the region. Londonderry in Northern Ireland is the UK’s second most affordable city. Others include Belfast, Bradford, Sunderland, Durham, Glasgow and Swansea.

Meanwhile, the paper also reports that young people on modest incomes face the prospect of never being able to afford to buy a property.

Nine out of 10 Britons on modest incomes under the age of 35 won’t ever be able to afford homes within a decade, according to a study by a leading thinktank.

The Resolution Foundation’s analysis shows that property ownership is projected to become increasingly restricted to wealthy and older households, laying out a bleak future for millennials.

One third of first-time buyers are now spending 5 years to save for their home

The thinktank’s findings show only a quarter of people aged 16-34 living in households with incomes “between 10 per cent and 50 per cent of the national average” bought their own homes in 2013-14. In 1998, more than half of that group were able. On current projections, the figure is on course to be 10 per cent across the UK as a whole by 2025 and just 5 per cent in London.

Matt Whittaker, chief economist at the Resolution Foundation, said:

“With the average modest income household having to spend 22 years to raise the money needed for a typical first time buyer deposit – up from just three years in the mid-1990s – it’s no surprise that owning looks so out of reach.”

“If we want to see an increase in working families being able to afford to buy, it is essential that the housing shortage is tackled by the government.”

Self-certified Sophisticated Investor

Please read

I declare that I am a self-certified sophisticated investor for the purposes of the restriction on promotion of non-mainstream pooled investments. I understand that this means:

I am a self-certified sophisticated investor because at least one of the following applies:

I accept that the investments to which the promotions will relate may expose me to a significant risk of losing all of the money or other property invested. I am aware that it is open to me seek advice from someone who specialises in advising on non-mainstream pooled investments.

High Net Worth Investor

Please read

I make this statement so that I can receive promotional communications which are exempt from the restriction on promotion of non-mainstream pooled investments. The exemption relates to certified high net worth investors and I declare that I qualify as such because at least one of the following applies to me:

aerial-view-uk-houses

緊貼市場趨勢

立即登記搶先獲得最新項目及獨家物業投資機會。

我們會定期發送電子通訊,介紹最適合您的全新發布項目及獨家優惠。 我們受到超過 30,000 名活躍買家的信任,不斷更新最新英國物業市場資訊。

  • 最新發展項目及獨家優惠
  • 樓市走勢專業分析
  • 物業市場成交數據
  • 項目建築進度定期更新
UK holiday let

最新最快英國樓市新聞。

追蹤我們最新樓市觀點,爲您提供前瞻性的建議和分析。

自 2005 年成立以來,我們是英國地產市場權威,提供前瞻性的建議和分析。我們的英國物業資訊獲得 Apple News 及 Google News 授權發佈。

  • 英國樓市趨勢
  • 按揭申請攻略
  • 業主放租須知
  • 物業指南及投資建議

請即聯絡

立即聯絡我們英國物業專家查詢更多:

 

+852 6699 9008

辦公時間 9am-6pm